Jaromir Jagr is gone, along with his complaints to Michal Rozsival to shoot less and pass more. But perhaps Rozsival still suffers flashbacks.

Does a surgically implanted chip, activated from Omsk, continue to resonate in the head of the Rangers’ most talented pointman?

Rozsival still is not shooting, and the Rangers still are not scoring on the power play. Their 14.7 percent success rate (26th in the NHL) going into tonight’s game in Toronto is even lower than the 16.5 percent of a year ago.

Granted, they have new players getting used to each other, in addition to getting used to not scoring. And, of course, the Rangers have the NHL’s best record regardless. But that won’t last if they continue to struggle with the man advantage in what has become a man-advantage NHL world.

“It’s my responsibility to fix that,” said coach Tom Renney. “I got lots of [other] guys in front of me I can send on the ice to send the message that [14.7 percent] is not good enough.

“They are thinking too much, trying to be too precise. It slows the pace down, the decisiveness down, and you can’t have that. You have to outwork the penalty killing, move the puck quick, get to rebounds.”

If that was life Wednesday night, when the Rangers followed up their 1-for-8 at Uniondale with a 1-for-6 that included an 0-for-2 during five-on-three opportunities, that life isn’t worth living. Nikolai Zherdev’s power-play goal against Atlanta resulted more from individual effort than puck movement but at least he went to the net.

“We’re not making it easy on ourselves, and that’s reflection of me,” said Scott Gomez, who yesterday missed practice with an unspecified injury, but is expected to play tonight, when Steve Valiquette will be in goal.

The good news for the Rangers is that there is no shortage of guys willing to take the blame. The bad news is that there is a shortage of guys willing to take the shots.

“I think I have been shooting quite a bit, but you could always shoot more,” said Rozsival. “I think I always like to shoot a big slap shot but I think I have to get more wristers through traffic to the net.

“[Without Jagr], I think we move the puck a little more, get all five guys involved. The set-up, though, is pretty much the same. You want to shoot the puck as much as you can, but [you] want to pick your spots. If you force it, that’s what happened to me the last game.”

Rozsival had a couple flubbers, not an indication of a lack of skill but of confidence, which comes back to a lack of commitment to crank it up.

“He has a great shot, so good I would contemplate using him on a shootout,” said Renney. “Michal has the ability to get the puck through, has to be a little more selfish, simple as that.”